This is the web app for the Open Targets Platform, based on the Open Targets REST API. The app is based on Angular, while D3 is used for visualization and graphs.
Depending on how you deploy, you might want to do two things:
- change the API the webapp points to
- apply a
custom.json
config that overrides the value inapp/config/<general,dictionary,datatypes,datasources>/default.json
,
for example to change evidence_sources
displayed
NB: In general, you shouldn't use custom.json
to override the {"api":}
variable of the app, otherwise the deploy steps described below will fail.
- Fork the webapp (unless you are a member of the Open Targets team who deploys to production 😄 )
- (optional) add a
custom.json
to/app/config/**/
to change your fork's configuration. When deploying with netlify, thecustom.json
cannot be changed without first commiting it to the code. - Set up netlify/github integration, including specifying the build steps
(
yarn run full-setup
) and the directory served (app
). - Change the
netlify.toml
to point to your API. The app will point to the API specified withAPIHOST
in thenetlify.toml
file.
A docker image with a compiled version of the webapp from a NGINX web server is available on quay.io
To start a container locally using the image:
docker run -d -p 8443:443 -p 8080:80 quay.io/opentargets/webapp
Then visit https://localhost:8443
The standard image comes with self-signed certificates, so you will have click through a couple of security warnings to get to the app. To add your own certificates, run something like this:
docker run -d -p 8443:443 -p 8080:80 \
-v <my_ssl_dir>/server.crt:/usr/share/nginx/server.crt \
-v <my_ssl_dir>/server.key:/usr/share/nginx/server.key \
quay.io/opentargets/webapp
You can specify the variables:
REST_API_SCHEME
(http
orhttps
are valid options,https
is the default)REST_API_SERVER
(e.g.rest_api
to point to a container namedrest_api
orapi.opentargets.io
to point to the production api;platform-api.opentargets.io
is the default)REST_API_PORT
(default is the HTTPS/443 port)
Example:
docker run -d -p 8443:443 -p 8080:80 \
-e "REST_API_SCHEME=https" \
-e "REST_API_SERVER=devapi.appspot.com" \
-e "REST_API_PORT=443" \
quay.io/opentargets/webapp
By default, the webapp /proxy should redirect to the proxy that is built into the rest api container. But it is also possible to specify a separate server for all /proxy calls (calls to external services and data resources used in some pages). These are the variables:
PROXY_SCHEME
(http
orhttps
are valid options,$REST_API_SCHEME
is the default)PROXY_SERVER
(if not set,$REST_API_SERVER
is the default)PROXY_PORT
(if not set,$REST_API_PORT
is the default)PROXY_PATH
(if not set,proxy
is the default)
ℹ️ When using the rest api built-in proxy, additional domains can be included by adding them to the appropriate nginx configuration file. See https://github.com/opentargets/rest_api/ documentation for more details.
Any other modifications, including changing the custom.json
for the container,
cannot be made at runtime. You'd have to create your own fork/modifications.
Read on to the developing section.
The script build_webapp.sh
will install the various dependencies needed to build the web application from source, assuming you're on a Debian (or Debian-like) machine.
Note that you will need to set the APIHOST
environment variable to point to your own REST API server if you're not using the default http://platform-api.opentargets.io
If you need to make any customisations to the web application code, you'll need to run yarn setup
and yarn build-all
after each change.
Once the build has completed, the code required for deployment will be in app/
You can test your build with Yarn's built-in web server via yarn run server
from the webapp
directory - this should not be used in production.
Any webserver that can serve the /app
directory will do.
NOTE to have a fully functional app, you also need to have your web server reverse proxy /proxy
to a valid REST API server. See how the build and deployment is done for Nginx in the Dockerfile
of this project.
You can run a nginx webserver using docker.
We have a Dockerfile
that is derived from nginx:alpine
which you can use.
To build:
docker build . -t webapp-image
To run: see section "Deploy using our docker image" above.
If you want to change the nginx configuration, you can change the nginx_conf/nginx.template before running the build step above.
If you push some changes to a branch of the main repo, a container with the tag of the branch will be publicly available after a few minutes on quay.io
docker pull quay.io/opentargets/webapp:<yourbranchname>
Read about how to create platform plugins here.